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Amelia Batistich

Amelia Batistich
QSM
Born Amelia Barbarich
(1915-03-11)11 March 1915
Dargaville, New Zealand
Died 21 August 2004(2004-08-21) (aged 89)
New Zealand
Occupation Fiction writer

Amelia Batistich QSM (née Barbarich, 11 March 1915 – 21 August 2004) was a New Zealand fiction writer of Croatian descent.

Batistich was born in Dargaville to John Barbarich and Milka Matutinovich, settlers from Dalmatia. Her parents ran a boarding house which attracted new migrants, including labourers heading for Northland's gumfields for work. She was educated at an Irish Catholic convent.

The family moved to Auckland when Batistich was 11. Her father worked at a quarry there with Dalmatian stonemasons, and she was thus again surrounded by Dalmatian people.

In the 1940s, aged about 44, she began to write poems and stories about her family and community, and the hardships faced by early settlers. These were initially published in The Listener magazine and the School Journal, a magazine for New Zealand school children. She also wrote about other ethnic minorities in New Zealand, such as Chinese in the Otago Gold Rush.

In 1981, Batistich's novel Pjevaj Vilo u Planini won first prize in an international competition in the former Yugoslavia for migrant writers, and she was invited to visit Croatia by the Croatian Writers' Guild.

Batistich was awarded the Queen's Service Medal for community service in the 1997 Queen's Birthday Honours. She has been credited with leading the way for other ethnic groups, such as Māori, to also express their outlook on the community they were living in.


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